GENEVA, -- The countries hosting refugees from their crisis-gripped neighbour, South Sudan, are straining under the sheer weight of the ongoing exodus as desperate people continue to arrive at their borders daily, joining hundreds of thousands of others that fled for safety before them, the United Nations has warned.

"There are already some 930,000 refugees in the region, and more are arriving daily," Adrian Edwards, a spokesperson for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) told journalists at the regular press briefing in Geneva.

"[We are] extremely worried that even as the refugee population grows, funds to meet basic needs are becoming exhausted," he added.

In addition to the refugee numbers, there are 1.61 million people who are displaced within South Sudan.

In the midst of the humanitarian crisis, the agency is facing critical funding shortages, having received only about 20 per cent of the $608.8 million needed for refugees in South Sudan and the six countries of asylum. A number of its programmes have been suspended to enable critical live-saving support for new arrivals.

Worst affected are the remote regions in Uganda, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the Central African Republic (CAR), where UNHCR had no previous presence. Ethiopia and Sudan, which have experienced mass influxes, are also badly affected.

Uganda and Sudan have received an estimated 110,000 and 100,000 new arrivals respectively in 2016, together accounting for more than 90 per cent of the new arrivals in the region.

To cope with the arrivals, the Government of Uganda has opened a new settlement in Yumbe, located in the north-west of the country, with a capacity for more than 100,000 individuals. But funds are urgently needed to speed the relocation of more than 45,000 refugees out of overstretched and severely congested reception and transit centres.

At the same time, the condition of refugee settlements is equally desperate. A particular case is Uganda, where three quarters of the refugee arrivals have headed since the outbreak of conflict in July, when the arrival rate peaked at more than 8,000 in one day.

New arrivals - 90 per cent of whom are women and children, mostly from Juba and other parts of Central Equatoria - point to a breakdown in law and order in their home areas.

"People cite rampant violence including killings and clashes between government forces and armed groups," highlighted the UN refugee agency spokesperson, adding: "They also report that armed groups are robbing civilians and extorting money from them, preventing those who are unable to pay from leaving, and sexually assaulting women," he continued.

"Armed groups are also reportedly abducting children aged 12 and above from schools and threatening people. Disappearances are said to also be on the rise."

"[We] commend the generosity of countries that are keeping their borders open and providing South Sudanese refugees with land for settlement," expressed the UNHCR spokesperson.

"In particular, we applaud Uganda's generous refugee law and policy regime, which among other benefits grants refugees freedom of movement, the right to seek employment and provides them with plots of land on which to build new homes and to grow agricultural crops," he added.

Edwards further noted that the agency appeals to the international community to support countries of asylum to protect and assist South Sudanese refugees.

"Continuing funding shortages will further disadvantage women, children and men who need urgent sustained help to overcome the trauma of forced displacement and get on the path to recovery, self-reliance and human dignity," he said.

Especially concerning is that the situation in previously stable areas is now deteriorating. Some 200,000 individuals have been fleeing new violence in previously stable areas such as Greater Equatoria and Greater Bahr-el-Ghazal.

The situation has been further compounded by a deteriorating South Sudanese economy. Inflation has risen an unprecedented 600 per cent over the past year, causing a severe fall in the purchasing value of money.

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